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Needing money to pay off its considerable debts, the British government imposed a series of new taxes on the American Colonies in the 1760s. The taxes—particularly the ones created by the Stamp Act in 1765 and the Townsend Acts, which taxed import goods, in 1767—outraged the colonists, who claimed that they could not be taxed without representation in the British Parliament.

In 1770, faced with increasing hostility in the Colonies, which was intensified by the Boston Massacre that March, the British repealed all the taxes included in the Townsend Acts except for the one on tea. American patriots refused to pay the tax, and illegally smuggled tea into the Colonies.

Meanwhile, the East India Company, a powerful trading company that was an important tool in Britain’s colonial expansion, was nearing bankruptcy. In 1773, the British government excused the East India Company from customs duties and gave it a monopoly on tea importation to America, undercutting the smugglers.

Colonists in port cities blocked East India ships from docking or placed the cargo in warehouses. In Boston, determined East India agents managed to land their ships in spite of the resistance.

On Nov. 28, 1773, three British ships—the Dartmouth, the Eleanor and the Beaver—arrived in Boston Harbor with a cargo of tea, but colonists would not allow the ships to be unloaded. The Sons of Liberty, a secret revolutionary organization led in Boston by Samuel Adams, felt compelled to act.

On the evening of Dec. 16, members of the organization dressed as Mohawk Indians and boarded the ships. Shouting “The Mohawks are come!” and “Boston harbor a teapot tonight!” the patriots split tea chests open with tomahawks and threw 35,000 pounds of leaves overboard. The tea was piled so high that it spilled back onto the decks and had to be shoveled over the side again.

Their work complete, the disguised patriots marched away to the tune of a fife. News of the Boston Tea Party spread, and other towns set about destroying the East India Company tea or otherwise preventing its importation.

In 1774, Britain passes a series of acts—known as the Intolerable Acts or Coercive Acts—in response to the Tea Party. Four of the five acts were designed specifically to punish Massachusetts. The hostility created by the Tea Party and Intolerable Acts put Britain and the colonies on the road to war. A year later, in April 1775, the Battles of Lexington and Concord marked the beginning of the Revolutionary War.

Samuel Adams was “an American patriot, one of the leaders of resistance to British policy in Massachusetts before the American Revolution,” writes iBoston. He was the head of the Boston chapter of the Sons of Liberty, a secret organization dedicated to chieving independence from Britain.